Real Madrid ace Gareth Bale must park his ego and take a pay cut to fulfil his dreams

Welshman wants out of the Bernabeu in search of regular football but his eye-watering price tag mean even Manchester United are hesitant

Comment

By Dave Kidd

29th May 2018, 10:30 pm

Updated: 1st June 2018, 9:43 am

ONE mantra you’re sure to hear chanted throughout the sporting world is that nothing can be achieved without team spirit.

There’s no “I” in team. Togetherness is next to Godliness. And it is advisable to disappear on SAS boot camps, eat worm omelettes and even drink one another’s urine in order to successfully “bond” before a major engagement.

Gareth Bale has won four Champions League titles at Real Madrid but there are issues behind the scenes

So wouldn’t you just love to see old Bear Grylls grapple with Real Madrid?

Because on Saturday night, Real achieved one of football’s greatest feats by completing a hat-trick of European Cups, when no club had previously even retained the thing during the Champions League era.

And within minutes of the final whistle in Kiev, it became apparent they had done so despite the fact they all pretty much hate each other and are only concerned about themselves.

Gareth Bale — having scored a goal of genius and majesty to help win the biggest club fixture of the year — instantly suggested that he wants out.

So having been immersed in this madness for five years, it’s little wonder that Bale — probably the most accomplished British footballer of the last half-century — might struggle to think clearly about his future.

The Welshman believes he should be starting regularly for an elite club.

Ronaldo out as Real Madrid launch new kit for 2018/19

Quite right too, given that he can arrive in a Champions League final and immediately score a goal so awe-inspiring that an insurance company would deem it an “act of God”.

The word from Bale’s camp, even before he was axed from the starting line-up against Liverpool, was that his relationship with boss Zinedine Zidane was irretrievably broken.

And Zidane is going nowhere. Bale will be 29 this summer and his most obvious next move would be back to the Premier League.

Manchester United, with their Galactico recruitment policy and need to compete with Manchester City, are the most likely destination.

Especially as they have just lavished similar wages on Alexis Sanchez only to see the Chilean struggle.

City and Chelsea are the only other two English clubs who could even think of meeting Bale’s transfer fee and wages, yet neither would be willing to do so for an injury-prone player with rapidly diminishing resale value.

Gareth Bale and Jack Whitehall prank unsuspecting people at a waxwork museum in Madrid

So if Bale wants to wring the maximum amount of glory from the remainder of his peak years, he will probably have to take a significant pay cut.

Such a move would be almost unheard of for one of the world’s top players still the right side of 30.

But it would mark Bale out as something unusual — a leading player not obsessed with the accumulation of greater and greater wealth.

Despite those four Champions League triumphs, those who know Bale say that his happiest time in football was reaching the semi-finals of Euro 2016 with Chris Coleman’s Wales squad.

During that campaign he relished being among a band of brothers, rather than in Madrid’s madhouse.

So while Real Madrid somehow managed to prove team spirit is not essential, a move might allow Bale a reminder that unity can be fun.

Zinedine Zidane celebrates Gareth Bale's amazing goal in the Champions League final

JURGEN KLOPP is a hugely likeable, charismatic leader who is a true force of nature.

But although the German coach significantly improved Liverpool, he hasn’t lost six straight finals entirely by chance.

No, we shouldn’t crucify Loris Karius for possessing two left hands and dropping the European Cup.

But it’s fair enough to question Klopp’s judgment when he persisted with a keeper who simply isn’t good enough at the highest level.

Yet in an age where touchline ‘passion’ is demanded of managers, the sight of a boss chain-smoking surely shows he cares.

Chelsea target Maurizio Sarri puffed away in the dugout at Napoli — but if he joins Blues he’d have to stick to a crafty one out the back of the stadium.

Those who recall Argentina’s ultra-cool Cesar Luis Menotti tabbing it up in the 70s will back my campaign to grant managers immunity from the smoking ban.

ENGLAND’S Test team is at its lowest ebb since 1999 when it was bottom of the world rankings.

Captain Joe Root appears out of his depth, while a talented middle- order continually play kamikaze shots. A crushing home loss to Pakistan, on the back of a humiliating winter Down Under, is the result of years of bad planning.

Including no County Championship games at the height of summer. And the ECB’s answer?

Spending £45m a year on a new 100-ball format for made-up sides, that will dominate the domestic calendar from 2020. It beggars belief.